What is 'known' in community music in higher education? Engagement, emotional learning and an ecology of ideas from the student perspective

Mellor, Liz
(2011)
What is 'known' in community music in higher education? Engagement, emotional learning and an ecology of ideas from the student perspective.
International Journal of Community Music, 4 (3).
pp. 257-275.

Abstract

This article aims to make explicit the evolving ecology of ideas in the field of community music and higher education that are particular to a context yet transferable across respective fields of enquiry - music education, community music, music therapy and community music therapy. This is contextualized in two ways: (1) through a consideration of what learning through 'community music' might represent in terms of 'knowledge' in higher education, and (2) a case study of community music within one university setting. The research draws from a series of research projects, including a community music focus group comprising undergraduate and postgraduate music students. It adopts a reflexive research approach between participants and researchers. The findings present a set of considerations for community music in higher education and five emergent themes from the student perspective. By applying Barnett's theory of knowing and being, the discussion leads to a reconsideration of what might be considered 'legitimate' knowledge in community music in higher education to include dispositions of engagement and qualities of emotional learning.